Pricing calculator template
Let someone find their own real price instead of asking for one.


A good pricing calculator does one job: let someone find their own real price instead of asking for one. The format matters, but the useful part is the thinking behind it. Readers need the context, the recommendation, the proof, and the next step without having to reverse engineer your intent.
Claude can turn your real pricing inputs, discounts, rules, and any options or tiers someone could choose between into a clear first version. Send turns that version into a live page you can share, track, and revise as the conversation changes.
What to include in the pricing calculator
- The real inputs that change the price, and nothing invented.
- A live result that updates as inputs change.
- A plain-language explanation of how the number was calculated.
- Any caps, discounts, or rules that apply.
- A next step once someone has their number.
Prompt to use in Claude
Search the registry for the Send connector. Once connected, use their "send/pricing-calculator" skill.
How to create it with Send
Give Claude your real pricing inputs, discounts, rules, and any options or tiers someone could choose between, plus any constraints, examples, or audience notes that matter. Ask it to create the pricing calculator with the Send connector so the output becomes a page instead of another loose document.
After you share it, Send helps you see whether prospective buyers open it, come back to it, or share it internally. You can update the same link when details change.
Pricing calculator structure
Inputs
The choices that actually change the price.
Calculation
The live, updating result.
How it works
The rules and logic behind the number.
Next step
What to do once you have your price.
Why send a pricing calculator as a page
A calculator gets someone to a real number faster than a call or a quote request. Send keeps it as a live page you can share, and lets you see who's actually running the numbers.